Guantanamo: Zes Jaar van Onrechtvaardigheid - en Tellend
Door Mary Shaw
11 januari, 2008, zal de zesde verjaardag van de eerste aankomst van gevangenen bij de Baai van Guantanamo merken.
Terwijl wat van de ingezetenen van Gitmo waarschijnlijk terroristen zijn die Amerikanen willen doden, hebben wij reden om te geloven dat vele anderen eigenlijk onschuldig van om het even welke banden aan terrorisme zijn en eenvoudig in de verkeerde plaats in de verkeerde tijd waren, of wegens een ongelukkige taalverkeerde interpretatie, gearresteerd of willekeurig aan de V.S. verkocht. troepen door bounty jagers.
And, as of this writing, only 10 Gitmo detainees have ever been charged with any crime.
In fact, a study by Seton Hall University found that 55 percent of Gitmo detainees are not determined to have committed any hostile acts against the United States or its coalition allies.
According to the same study, only eight percent were characterized as al-Qaeda fighters. 40 percent of the remaining detainees have no definitive connection with al-Qaeda at all, and 18 percent have no definitive affiliation with either al-Qaeda or the Taliban!
Imagine being an innocent person locked up in a 6.5′ x 8′ cage and mistreated for six years straight — 2,191 days — without charge, and with no real means to challenge your detention or prove your innocence — just an unfair military tribunal system that has been condemned by Amnesty International and other human rights groups as a travesty of justice. But, you see, the Bushies say that the Gitmo detainees are “the worst of the worst” and therefore don’t deserve basic human rights.
In other words, they’re presumed guilty until proven innocent — but they have no opportunity to prove their innocence. Catch-22.
Imagine the helplessness, hopelessness, and despair that the innocent detainees must feel. And think of their families. These innocent detainees are not just numbers; they are fathers, sons, husbands, brothers, uncles, nephews, cousins, and friends. And some of them were just kids when they were arrested.
Congress blessed this horrific system when it passed the Military Commissions Act of 2006, which turned a really bad policy into really bad law.
Congress should be ashamed. And Congress should waste no more time in correcting that mistake.
We need to close Guantanamo — a national embarrassment — and give each detainee a fair trial, in accordance in international law. Sort them out in a credible court of law, release the ones found innocent, and punish the true bad guys.
Why is a fair trial so unacceptable to the Bush administration — and to Congress?
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